High‐energy synchrotron‐radiation‐based X‐ray micro‐tomography enables non‐destructive and micro‐scale palaeohistological assessment of macro‐scale fossil dinosaur bones

Palaeohistological analysis has numerous applications in understanding the palaeobiology of extinct dinosaurs. Recent developments of synchrotron‐radiation‐based X‐ray micro‐tomography (SXMT) have allowed the non‐destructive assessment of palaeohistological features in fossil skeletons. Yet, the app...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of synchrotron radiation 2023-05, Vol.30 (3), p.627-633
Hauptverfasser: Imai, Takuya, Hattori, Soki, Uesugi, Kentaro, Hoshino, Masato
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Palaeohistological analysis has numerous applications in understanding the palaeobiology of extinct dinosaurs. Recent developments of synchrotron‐radiation‐based X‐ray micro‐tomography (SXMT) have allowed the non‐destructive assessment of palaeohistological features in fossil skeletons. Yet, the application of the technique has been limited to specimens on the millimetre to micrometre scale because its high‐resolution capacity has been obtained at the expense of a small field of view and low X‐ray energy. Here, SXMT analyses of dinosaur bones with widths measuring ∼3 cm under a voxel size of ∼4 µm at beamline BL28B2 at SPring‐8 (Hyogo, Japan) are reported, and the advantages of virtual‐palaeohistological analyses with large field of view and high X‐ray energy are explored. The analyses provide virtual thin‐sections visualizing palaeohistological features comparable with those obtained by traditional palaeohistology. Namely, vascular canals, secondary osteons and lines of arrested growth are visible in the tomography images, while osteocyte lacunae are unobservable due to their micrometre‐scale diameter. Virtual palaeohistology at BL28B2 is advantageous in being non‐destructive, allowing multiple sampling within and across skeletal elements to exhaustively test the skeletal maturity of an animal. Continued SXMT experiments at SPring‐8 should facilitate the development of SXMT experimental procedures and aid in understanding the paleobiology of extinct dinosaurs. Synchrotron‐radiation‐based X‐ray micro‐tomography at beamline BL28B2 at SPring‐8 (Hyogo, Japan) enables the non‐destructive assessment of palaeohistological features in dense, fossilized bones of an allosauroid dinosaur, Fukuiraptor kitadaniensis, demonstrating its effectiveness in virtual palaeohistology.
ISSN:1600-5775
0909-0495
1600-5775
DOI:10.1107/S1600577523001790